I read this book because of how many others have read it, and because many have been helped by it. I agree there is a lot of help here. I think Comer puts his finger on a real problem and offers a right solution. There really is a lack of understanding regarding the Gospel in the West. A firm “yes” to the question “are you a Christian?” is not enough, and we really do need to revive a sense of what it really means to be saved in both belief and practice. A Christ-follower who reads this book and walks away with a greater commitment to follow Christ in all things and with a clear plan to commit more time to knowing Him (a “Rule of Life”) will be blessed by it. I was. It was an extremely helpful reminder that our life rhythms are shaping us whether we know it or not, and one of the best ways to be formed into Christ is to take ownership of those rhythms by implementing practices (disciplines) that, in many ways, mimic the life of our Lord. I was grateful for that help.
On the other hand, the help, though well-intended, is offered (explicitly) in the form of a cloud of mysticism that at best blurs the clarity of the Gospel and, at worst, hides it entirely. Two dangers stand out to me as the most prominent:
1. The Gospel is a finished work that transforms hardened sinners into righteous saints. Period. All people, by faith in Christ, receive the free gift of sainthood (i.e., they are "sanctified", or "made holy"). Even the Christians at Corinth, with all their many horrendous sins, were addressed by Paul as "saints" - and I don't think he was being sarcastic. Their problem, and ours, was not that they needed to become holy, but that they needed to be reminded that they were already sanctified and then be exhorted to live lives in alignment with that undeserved gift. In the upside-down Kingdom it is not godliness that produces saints, but saints that produce godliness. Comer seems to communicate the reverse. He begins and ends with explicit calls for Christians to "become saints", but the call is implicit everywhere. This is where the Gospel gets blurry. The emphasis on certain practices that enable a person to get more "heaven into you" and be truly transformed make it unclear whether simple faith really is enough to receive the merits of Christ's work. Of course, true faith does necessarily entail a transformation of character and behavior. Yet where Comer would say the Gospel is "less about a transaction and more about transformation", the Biblical model appears to be that the Gospel is all about a transaction that produces a transformation. The Gospel, though not dependent on our personal godliness, always creates it. To be fair, what he means by saint is not necessarily clear. What is clear is that it has a lot to do with a deeper experience of the second danger.
2. To be a mystic is to stress the importance of subjective experience as a means (normally, THE means) of communing with God. For Comer, these subjective experiences include things like feeling God's presence in prayer, following the inner "promptings" of the Spirit, and practicing the gift of prophecy. These things are central to "the Way". There's nothing wrong with subjective experience, and it is a great gift from God that we each have moments of fresh delight in the Lord and/or supernatural empowerment. But making experience a chief pursuit is problematic for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is that we come to rely so heavily on "feelings" that we begin to be led by them and, when we lose them, to believe we aren’t being led at all. That's a dangerous game, and one that so easily leads to a slew of strange beliefs and practices to the neglect (often) of the objective, unchanging, immovable revelation of God through His Word. It is the Word that has always been the surest and best means of communion with a God who has definitively made himself known. The “Way” doesn’t neglect the Word, but it is #5 on the list for a reason.
These two undercurrents throughout the book have a subtle but strong pull away from what I think is the pure Gospel (faith alone) and the sure way (Scripture alone, though not without other means) to know God and grow more like Christ. Resisting these currents will be a real challenge for any reader looking for help to make it further upstream in the fight for greater Gospel-induced Christ-likeness.